Microsoft's AI boom collides with its climate goals
Microsoft's latest environmental report shows the growing tension between its race to build AI infrastructure and its long-standing climate commitments.
Why it matters: The report mirrors recent disclosures from Google and Amazon, whose emissions and resource use have also climbed alongside AI growth.
Driving the news: Like its tech peers, Microsoft's environmental impact indicators largely continued moving upward.
- Its total greenhouse gas emissions are up 25%, fueled by both its growth in digital infrastructure, especially AI, and changes to the company's electricity procurement strategy.
- The company said a key measure of data-center water-use efficiency improved 25% from its 2022 baseline, putting it on track toward a goal of improving that metric 40% by 2030.
The big picture: Amazon, Google, Microsoft and Meta account for roughly two-thirds of the data-center power capacity among the top 15 tracked by financial firm Jefferies, meaning their environmental strategies increasingly shape the industry's footprint.
State of play: Climate goals established earlier this decade are becoming harder to achieve as AI infrastructure expands.
- Microsoft Chief Sustainability Officer Melanie Nakagawa declined to directly reaffirm whether the company remains on track to meet its goal of becoming carbon negative by 2030, instead emphasizing the broader challenge facing the industry.
"Many of the sustainability solutions are not scaling fast enough to keep pace with AI infrastructure growth," she said.
Stunning stat: Microsoft's reported emissions from purchased electricity jumped 945% between 2024 and 2025, while its electricity consumption increased 24%.
- Much of that increase reflects Microsoft's decision to move away from relying on renewable energy certificates from existing projects that don't necessarily spur new clean energy development.
- Instead, it says it's moving toward investments that help finance new carbon-free electricity.
"This decision shows up as increasing our reported emissions in the near term," said Nakagawa. "But we believe it creates greater long-term environmental value because it actually helps expand carbon-free electricity capacity and generation on the grids that we need it to be in."
Between the lines: Microsoft reiterated that it bought enough renewable electricity to match 100% of its annual electricity consumption, a milestone it first announced earlier this year.
Yes, but: That annual matching claim exists alongside Microsoft's development of at least two data centers that will rely on natural gas for power, in Texas and West Virginia.
- Asked about those projects, Nakagawa said Microsoft balances climate goals with reliability and the need to bring power online quickly as AI demand accelerates.
- She noted the company already has several gigawatts of carbon-free electricity in Texas while it also explores "solutions that help address near-term reliability and speed-to-power challenges in regions where grid constraints may limit the pace of development."
- The company is "exploring a variety of options for mitigating the emissions associated with these plants," a spokesperson also said.
Zoom out: For the first time, Microsoft said that on a global basis, it returned more water to watersheds than it withdrew last year.
- Water used to cool data centers can either be consumed or returned to local waterways after use.
- While Microsoft's water withdrawals and water consumption have both risen alongside AI growth, the company said its replenishment efforts have grown even faster.
Nakagawa said the larger objective remains replenishing water within the same watersheds where it is withdrawn.
- Meeting the global milestone, she said, is "a proof point that we have capabilities to deliver replenishment projects at scale."
The bottom line: Three annual reports in, the message from big tech is becoming clearer: AI is accelerating faster than many of the sustainability plans companies put in place earlier this decade.
Related Markets
All MarketsMarket data may be delayed. Not financial advice.
💡 AI analysis provides alternative perspectives on current events